This plugin serves as a starting point for writing a Mattermost plugin. Feel free to base your own plugin off this repository.
To learn more about plugins, see our plugin documentation.
This template requires node v16 and npm v8. You can download and install nvm to manage your node versions by following the instructions here. Once you've setup the project simply run nvm i
within the root folder to use the suggested version of node.
Use GitHub's template feature to make a copy of this repository by clicking the "Use this template" button.
Alternatively shallow clone the repository matching your plugin name:
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/mattermost/mattermost-plugin-starter-template com.example.my-plugin
Note that this project uses Go modules. Be sure to locate the project outside of $GOPATH
.
Edit the following files:
plugin.json
with yourid
,name
, anddescription
:
{
"id": "com.example.my-plugin",
"name": "My Plugin",
"description": "A plugin to enhance Mattermost."
}
go.mod
with your Go module path, following the<hosting-site>/<repository>/<module>
convention:
module github.com/example/my-plugin
.golangci.yml
with your Go module path:
linters-settings:
# [...]
goimports:
local-prefixes: github.com/example/my-plugin
Build your plugin:
make
This will produce a single plugin file (with support for multiple architectures) for upload to your Mattermost server:
dist/com.example.my-plugin.tar.gz
To avoid having to manually install your plugin, build and deploy your plugin using one of the following options. In order for the below options to work, you must first enable plugin uploads via your config.json or API and restart Mattermost.
"PluginSettings" : {
...
"EnableUploads" : true
}
If your Mattermost server is running locally, you can enable local mode to streamline deploying your plugin. Edit your server configuration as follows:
{
"ServiceSettings": {
...
"EnableLocalMode": true,
"LocalModeSocketLocation": "/var/tmp/mattermost_local.socket"
},
}
and then deploy your plugin:
make deploy
You may also customize the Unix socket path:
export MM_LOCALSOCKETPATH=/var/tmp/alternate_local.socket
make deploy
If developing a plugin with a webapp, watch for changes and deploy those automatically:
export MM_SERVICESETTINGS_SITEURL=http://localhost:8065
export MM_ADMIN_TOKEN=j44acwd8obn78cdcx7koid4jkr
make watch
Alternatively, you can authenticate with the server's API with credentials:
export MM_SERVICESETTINGS_SITEURL=http://localhost:8065
export MM_ADMIN_USERNAME=admin
export MM_ADMIN_PASSWORD=password
make deploy
or with a personal access token:
export MM_SERVICESETTINGS_SITEURL=http://localhost:8065
export MM_ADMIN_TOKEN=j44acwd8obn78cdcx7koid4jkr
make deploy
Simply delete the server
or webapp
folders and remove the corresponding sections from plugin.json
. The build scripts will skip the missing portions automatically.
Place them into the assets
directory. To use an asset at runtime, build the path to your asset and open as a regular file:
bundlePath, err := p.API.GetBundlePath()
if err != nil {
return errors.Wrap(err, "failed to get bundle path")
}
profileImage, err := ioutil.ReadFile(filepath.Join(bundlePath, "assets", "profile_image.png"))
if err != nil {
return errors.Wrap(err, "failed to read profile image")
}
if appErr := p.API.SetProfileImage(userID, profileImage); appErr != nil {
return errors.Wrap(err, "failed to set profile image")
}
Setting the MM_DEBUG
environment variable will invoke the debug builds. The simplist way to do this is to simply include this variable in your calls to make
(e.g. make dist MM_DEBUG=1
).